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243 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1993
"obviously, doctor, you've never been a thirteen-year-old girl.鈥�
All wisdom ends in paradox.This book came at me at an interesting time in my life. For that, it will remain a memorable bookmark in the tumult. The story is about the eponymous virgins, five sisters, the Lisbons, who get embroiled in the miasma of adolescence and the misery of puberty. A stage of life characterised by the growing awareness of the meaninglessness of life. Usually, this is the best time to introduce a teenager to Linkin Park or Taylor Swift. There is no middle ground. (Before Taytay, there was Kelly Clarkson).
The Lisbon girls became a symbol of what was wrong with the country, the pain it inflicted on even its most innocent citizens...The book has no hurry to explain itself to you. It even is possessed of such keen self-awareness. When the young girls die and their parents decide to put the house on the market, it has to be gutted to make it suitable for sellers. But even then, it didn't reveal more to our narrators than what we'd been told this far,
...we learned little more about the girls than we knew already. It felt as though the house could keep disgorging debris forever, a tidal wave of unmatched slippers and dresses scarecrowed on hangers, and after sifting through it all we would still know nothing.
the Lisbons鈥� sadness was beyond comprehensionI kept reading, not because I was desperate to find out why five young girls who were normal, healthy with a functional father and a high-strung mother, parents symptomatic of suburbia, would choose such a way to end things, but because the language just kept leading me on.
In the end, we had pieces of the puzzle, but no matter how we put them together, gaps remained, oddly shaped emptinesses mapped by what surrounded them, like countries we couldn鈥檛 name.
鈥淪hit,鈥� he said, 鈥渨hat have kids got to be worried about now? If they want trouble, they should go live in Bangladesh.鈥�But no one country has a monopoly on troubled suffering or rumination of misfortune. Even the self-important citizens of the world's wealthiest third world country can attest to that. Or perhaps, suicide is inevitable in some people like psychosis, some are simply genetically or environmentally predisposed to die this way.
鈥淲ith most people,鈥� he said, 鈥渟uicide is like Russian roulette. Only one chamber has a bullet. With the Lisbon girls, the gun was loaded. A bullet for family abuse. A bullet for genetic predisposition. A bullet for historical malaise. A bullet for inevitable momentum. The other two bullets are impossible to name, but that doesn鈥檛 mean the chambers were empty.鈥�Then again, the book does ask if suicide is a selfish means of escape. As someone with suicidal ideation, at no point was I triggered or questioning why this happens to me. It seemed to demystify something that is painfully human, normal, as though pointing out the futility of pessimism or the indignity of optimism. Maybe it's just enough to be.